I voted for Donald Trump today. And, no, I don’t feel an ounce of guilt. I feel like an American.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016 9:45

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When it became clear to me months ago that Donald Trump would become the only real challenge to a Hillary Rodham Clinton victory for the White House, I became more verbal and perhaps more public about the 2016 presidential election than I’ve ever been about any election since I started voting in the early 70s. I believe this election remains, so far as this world is concerned, the last hope to preserve what we have left of a democratic republic founded upon our original constitution. Political corruption in both Democratic and Republican parties remains a primary reason our beloved country has tanked, albeit the former has been more actively scrubbing our constitutional rights away while the latter has passively allowed it to take place. Money, power, and greed are seeded deep down in both parties.

Thus, contrary to those who continue to tell me why I voted for Donald Trump, I most certainly did not vote for Trump because he is on the Republican ticket. As I mentioned above, political corruption in the Republican establishment soars just about as high as corruption in the Democratic establishment. While the platforms themselves are entirely different (and yes, the Republican platform still retains a hearty, healthy dose of constitutional republicanism), too many of the same greedy politicians infest both parties. Hence, I presently hold no allegiance to a single Republican just because he is a Republican. And, frankly, I think I represent a lot of Conservative Christians in saying that.

What is more, I voted for Trump because, given the dark alternative I firmly believe exists if Donald Trump does not win the White House, I voted for Trump because, for me, I was morally compelled to vote for Trump.

Others may not see it as I do. Granted.

But I am not responsible to detractors for whom I vote.

I am responsible to God, to my family, to my church, to my country, to myself.

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House threatens the future of the United States

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House forges the Supreme Court toward a Leftward direction for at least the next generation

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House seals the destruction of the 2nd Amendment

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House disassembles our Military and needlessly put our sons and daughters in harm’s way

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House advances the culture of death, and in every conceivable way, pushes an abortion on demand and euthanasia agenda to extremes we’ve not experienced in the United States

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House continues a fatal attack on religious liberty and especially discriminates against conservative Christian beliefs and values in society generally and education particularly

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House increases socialized medicine by extending Obamacare’s failed policies further into the lives of American citizens

Evangelicals are voting for Donald Trump because they’re convinced a Clinton White House loosens even more the failed immigration laws we presently have so as to endanger the lives of American people by implementing more open border policies, offering mass amnesty for illegal immigrants, and through insufficient patrol, encourages terrorists to enter our borders by stealth.